Dana White Reveals If Conor McGregor Will Retire After Floyd Mayweather Fight

MMA may be moving along at a snail’s pace during a ho-hum start to 2017, and a lot of that has to do with lightweight champion Conor McGregor’s absence from the octagon as he chases a lucrative boxing match with Floyd Mayweather, a bout that is reportedly at a standstill itself. Rumors recently arose from

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MMA may be moving along at a snail’s pace during a ho-hum start to 2017, and a lot of that has to do with lightweight champion Conor McGregor’s absence from the octagon as he chases a lucrative boxing match with Floyd Mayweather, a bout that is reportedly at a standstill itself.

Rumors recently arose from a Showtime Sports exec that talks of the bout had stalled because the UFC was worried their golden goose would promptly retire after securing a potential nine-figure payday against “Money,” but UFC President Dana White told TMZ that simply isn’t true in an interview this week:

“I saw a quote the other day from a guy from Showtime who said that I’m stalling the thing [Mayweather vs. McGregor] because I’m worried that McGregor will retire after this fight, which is completely false and not even close to being true.”

White suggested the combat sports world simply pump their brakes a bit and be patient, as a once-in-a-lifetime bout is difficult to navigate and will take a long time to make a reality:

“To get a deal like this done, this doesn’t happen in a couple months. It’s gonna be a tough deal to get done, if it gets done at all.”

Indeed a deal like that doesn’t get done in a couple months, as McGregor vs. Mayweather went from what seemed like a a laughing matter to something that looked like a near certainty just a couple months ago before talks died down.

But the UFC’s biggest star by far remains on the sidelines in a time where they need him the most, so it would serve White and his new bosses at WME-IIMG to figure something out before 2017 goes down as the worst year in promotional history. Do you have faith they’ll be able to turn things around?

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Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor: Booking the Biggest Card in Combat Sports

By now it’s no real secret: Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor is on the table.
It’s on the table to the extent Dana White has publicly made a first offer to the combatants, McGregor has insisted his next scrap will be under boxing rules, …

By now it’s no real secret: Floyd Mayweather vs. Conor McGregor is on the table.

It’s on the table to the extent Dana White has publicly made a first offer to the combatants, McGregor has insisted his next scrap will be under boxing rules, and Mayweather has talked almost exclusively of the Irishman as his next challenge.

There’s been some back-and-forth from all parties involved, as is the case with any negotiation, and opinions vary on the plausibility of the fight happening. Still, with talk as hot as it’s ever been about the crossover fight and people from both sides of the combat sports aisle weighing in, it’s hard not to think you’ll be watching Mayweather and McGregor slug it out by the end of 2017.

Part of the deal in the earliest stages of the discussion surrounding the bout has been talks of who will be responsible for building the undercard. If White is to be believed, it will be the UFC—a potential boon for the MMA giant, which would be granted the chance to get the sport in front of its largest pay-per-view audience ever (and maybe the largest pay-per-view audience ever).

If they’re going to secure that right and then pull it off with the proper pomp and circumstance, the promotion will need to put together a card full of title fights, proven stars and stars of tomorrow to truly maximize the opportunity.

Going on the presumption the event will be a five-fight main card taking place late this year and with Mayweather-McGregor in the main event slot, here are the four bouts that should support the two biggest names in the business on what would be the biggest night in UFC history.

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